Anticipation grows ahead of Newcastle season for blockbuster The Rocky Horror Show

Seats are being snapped up by audiences keen to do the time warp again when the 50th anniversary tour of The Rocky Horror Show heads to Newcastle’s Civic Theatre.

The classic rock’n’roll musical is proving to be one of the hottest tickets in town, with thousands of bookings being made within days of the Newcastle season going on sale.

The ticket blitz was welcome news for leading British theatre producer Sir Howard Panter of Trafalgar Entertainment, who has returned to Newcastle today with key cast member Stellar Perry, who plays the mischievous Magenta, to give locals a sneak peek of what to expect in January.

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Sir Howard Panter said he was delighted to debut The Rocky Horror Show in Newcastle as the first stop on its national tour in 2024.

“We are thrilled to be able to bring the first of what will be many new international smash hit theatre productions to the city, and what better way to start the party than with the ultimate rock’n’roll celebration, The Rocky Horror Show,” Sir Panter said.

“Ticket sales have gone gangbusters since we first announced we are bringing The Rocky Horror Show to Newcastle and audiences are in for the time of their lives.”

Newcastle Lord Mayor Nuatali Nelmes said the early ticket sales showed just how much Newcastle audiences appreciated being able to see shows of this calibre at their own iconic Civic Theatre.

“There’s already so much anticipation building across the community for this show, and it’s only just over a week since we first announced it was coming to Newcastle,” Cr Nelmes said.

“The record-breaking Come From Away season earlier this year showed just how much demand there is for world-class entertainment in Newcastle, and the impact it has on our visitor economy by attracting a large contingent of its audiences from outside of the city.

“As one of the world’s most popular musicals, we expect The Rocky Horror Show will also be a major drawcard show for the city, with Jason Donovan and Myf Warhurst expected to wow fans with their performances as Frank N Furter and the Narrator.”

Sold out in London, Sydney and Melbourne, this 50th Anniversary world tour of The Rocky Horror Show will continue its global celebrations with a new Australian production set to open at Newcastle Civic Theatre from 12 January until 4 February 2024.

The production runs for 120 minutes, including intermission and is recommended for ages 12 and older.

To secure tickets, visit www.civictheatrenewcastle.com.au

Ellis officially becomes Legend of NSW netball  

Former Swifts and Diamonds captain Liz Ellis AO has received Netball NSW’s highest honour after being elevated to Legend Status in the organisation’s Hall of Fame.

Regarded by many as the greatest netballer of all time, Ellis was elevated to her new status at Netball NSW’s Annual State Dinner at the Waterview in Sydney Olympic Park on Saturday night.

A four-time Premiership-winning captain of the Swifts, she also won three Netball World Cups and two Commonwealth Gold Medals with the Australian Diamonds.

Ellis started her playing journey at the Hawkesbury Netball Association before representing NSW at underage and opens levels. When the National Netball League (currently Suncorp Super Netball) was founded in 1997 she became a Foundation player of the Swifts.

Ellis captained the Foundation Club to four Premierships in the Commonwealth Bank Trophy era of the National League, winning in 2001, 2004, 2006 and 2007. She retired in 2007, just before the Sydney Swifts rebranded as the NSW Swifts

Ellis became Australian captain in 2004 and remains the most capped player in Diamonds history.

In 2007 she capped off a remarkable comeback from a knee reconstruction to lead Australia to World Cup glory, while in 2008 Netball Australia introduced the Liz Ellis Diamond which is awarded annually to the nation’s most outstanding netballer. Ellis was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 2011 and the Netball NSW Hall of Fame in 2013.

It was also a special night for Ellis’ former teammates Susan Pettitt and Vanessa Ware who were inducted into the Netball NSW Hall of Fame.

Like Ellis, both Pettitt and Ware are Swifts Centurions and with many Premierships between them.

Pettitt, who shone for the Diamonds at international level too, enjoyed a highly-decorated attacking career with the Swifts, wining titles in the Club’s famous 2006, 2007 and 2008 threepeat, while she won World Cup gold with Australia in 2007. In 2017 she became a foundation GIANT and played a Grand Final with the new Club before retiring from the game in 2018.

Ware won her first Swifts Premiership in 2004 was also part of their threepeat success in a career that lasted over a decade. She represented Australia and 19U and 21U levels and was part of the Australian Diamonds squad in 2008.

Also inducted into the Netball NSW Hall of Fame were former Diamonds and Swifts medical officer Dr Grace Bryant OAM and the late former Netball NSW President Pat Weston OAM.

In the night’s main awards Sarah Klau (Swifts) and Amy Parmenter (GIANTS) were both honoured with the Marilyn Melhuish OAM Medal for their respective performances in this year’s Suncorp Super Netball competition, while Sutherland’s Victor Nikolić wasnamed Male Player of the Year.

Wagga Wagga’s Rachel King took out the Margaret Corbett OAM Coaches Award with Michael Rudd of Orange Netball Association winning the Neita Matthews OAM Umpire Award and Alex Pinnington (Camden & District) named the Lynn Quinn OAM Bench Official Award recipient.

The Dot McHugh Administrator of the Year was Randwick’s Jenny Morrissey while journalists Brit Carter (ABC) and Nathan Taylor (Western Weekender) took home the Judy Dunbar Media Awards for best Overall Media Coverage (Carter) and Community Media Excellence (Taylor).

This years Anne Clark Service Awards were presented to Margaret Findlay (Manly Warringah), Maureen Sinclair (Northern Suburbs), Cheryl Goulder (Randwick), Katrina Doring (Eastwood Ryde) and Kathy Staggs (Ku-Ring-Gai).

“In our game, champions come in many different guises and Saturday night was a celebration of our entire netball community,” Sallianne Faulkner, Netball NSW Chair, said.

“We have those we see on our TV Screens winning World Cups, Commonwealth Gold Medals and Super Netball titles. But we also have those who hit the courts on cold Saturday mornings in winter, whose determination to play, coach or officiate cannot be diminished by the weather.

“Because, from grassroots to the Green & Gold of the Diamonds, we are all part of the same sporting community and netball champions cannot exist without those who champion netball.

“Our Hall of Fame inductees and Awards winners are just some of the wonderful people who keep netball at the forefront of the NSW sporting landscape and on behalf of Netball NSW I congratulate them, and their support networks, on their fitting recognition.”

Netball NSW State Dinner Awards Winners

  • Marilyn Melhuish SSN Medal: Sarah Klau (Swifts), Amy Parmenter (GIANTS)
  • Men’s Player of the Year: Victor Nikolić (Sutherland)
  • Margaret Corbett Coaches Award: Rachel King (Wagga Wagga)
  • Neita Matthews Umpire Award: Michael Rudd (Orange)
  • Lynn Quinn Bench Official Award: Alex Pinnington (Camde & District)
  • Dot McHugh Administrator Award: Jenny Morrissey (Randwick)
  • Judy Dunbar Media Awards: Brit Carter (ABC, Overall Media Coverage), Nathan Taylor (Western Weekender, Community Media Excellence)

Netball NSW Hall of Fame Inductions

  • Liz Ellis AO: Elevated to Legend Status
  • Susan Pettitt: Inducted under Athlete Category
  • Vanessa Ware: Inducted under Athlete Category
  • Dr Grace Bryant OAM: Inducted under General Category
  • Pat Weston OAM: Inducted under General Category

Anne Clark Service Award Recipients 

  • Margaret Findlay (Manly Warringah)
  • Maureen Sinclair (Northern Suburbs)
  • Cheryl Goulder (Randwick)
  • Katrina Doring (Eastwood Ryde)
  • Kathy Staggs (Ku-Ring-Gai).

GREENS SUPPORT LEGAL ACTION FOR TRANSPARENCY ON AUSTRALIAN MILITARY EXPORTS TO ISRAEL

The Australian Greens are calling on the Albanese Government to stop providing military export permits to the Israeli Government and provide transparency on the military equipment Australia exports to the world, following legal action from Palestinian human rights groups. 

The Greens discovered that this year alone the Albanese Government has provided 52 military export permits to the Israeli Government and over 350 since 2017. It was also discovered that once weapons leave our shores no part of the Government monitors their use or abuse.

However, the Australian public has not been told what the weapons are or how much they cost. The Albanese Government must reveal this information and ensure equipment is not being used to commit war crimes. 

This morning Palestinian human rights organisations supported by the Australian Centre for International Justice launched legal action against the Albanese Government to provide transparency on military export permits authorised to Israel.

The Greens oppose Australia’s weapons export system, which is one of the most secretive and unaccountable in the world, with the Government providing military equipment to some of the world’s worst violators of human rights, including Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the UAE and Israel.

The lack of transparency and accountability is of concern as the Israeli Government’s attacks on Gaza have killed thousands of innocents and hit hospitals, schools and civilian infrastructure in what amounts to collective punishment and war crimes.
 
Senator David Shoebridge Greens spokesperson on Defence said: 

“The Albanese Government has been fueling conflicts around the world through a weapons export system that has zero accountability or transparency.

“It is horrific to think that for many people, the first interaction they will have with Australia will be the Australian-made weapon that kills them. 

“The Australian Greens support this legal action as a critical attempt to force transparency in Australia’s global arms trade.

“As bombs rain down on Gaza and the Israeli ground invasion continues, the Australian government has a clear obligation to ensure no Australian equipment is being used to commit war crimes.”
 

Appointment of Australian Ambassadors

Today I announce the appointment of Dr Lucas de Toca PSM as Australia’s Ambassador for Global Health and Ms Greer Alblas as Australia’s Ambassador and Permanent Delegate of Australia to UNESCO.

As Ambassador for Global Health, Dr de Toca will advance Australia’s interests in the global health system, ensuring it delivers for the Pacific and Southeast Asia, so we can be better prepared for future health emergencies.

The Ambassador for Global Health will work closely with governments and communities in our region to support their health priorities, including through the Australian Government’s flagship Partnerships for a Healthy Region initiative.

Dr de Toca is a medical doctor, adjunct professor in medicine, and public health expert with extensive experience in pandemic response, First Nations health and rural health service delivery.

He leads the Global Health Division and the Indo-Pacific Centre for Health Security at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, managing Australia’s relationship with multilateral health organisations and our international development assistance in health. 

The role of UNESCO Ambassador will now be full-time, reflecting a step up in Australia’s commitment to UNESCO. It will increase our ability to bring Australian expertise and experience to UNESCO’s work.

Ms Alblas is a career officer with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and was most recently Director, Curriculum and Outreach, Diplomatic Academy. She has previously served overseas at the Australian Permanent Mission to the UN, Geneva.

The mission of UNESCO is to build peace through international cooperation – a goal Australia strongly supports. The expertise UNESCO brings in education, science, and culture is vital to advancing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

I thank outgoing Ambassadors Megan Anderson and Dr Stephanie Williams PSM, for their contributions to advancing Australia’s interests overseas.

Australia under Albanese

3.7 million Australian households are going hungry or on the edge of falling into hunger. We are bombarded by statistic after statistic, but this one from Foodbank Australia’s 2023 Hunger Report hits like a truck.

Just weeks away from Christmas, 77 per cent of Australian households experiencing food insecurity are doing so for the first time and 60 per cent of those in this dire situation are employed.

Shockingly in 2023, like in the 1920s, breadlines are appearing in our cities.

Australia under Albanese is looking less like the Lucky Country and more like the Hungry Country.

This is a far cry from what Anthony Albanese promised Australians: “No one left behind because we should always look after the disadvantaged and the vulnerable…That is what my government will do.”

Instead, over 500 days into the Albanese Labor Government, the Prime Minister’s core promises are missing in action. Like a bowtie gathering dust in a cloak room from one of his fancy dinners, ‘no one left behind’ has been forgotten.

For millions of Australians the pain will sadly get worse.

With the Prime Minister off overseas once again, Australians are staring down the barrel of another rise in the cash rate with the worst fear of many families confirmed by the assessments of all big four banks.

Days ago when I visited food charity OzHarvest I was told they see an immediate spike in demand for food every time the interest rate goes up.

The big four banks and the IMF agree rates will need to go up again and may have to be raised more than once.

Another rate rise will hit hard just as families try to make the sums add up for Christmas presents or that special family gathering.

It is now widely accepted by economists that Australia’s inflation challenge is homegrown and that is why rates will have to go up again. Indeed, once you dive into the data, you see the reason we have to have another rate rise is squarely as a result of the decisions Labor have made.

Labor missed their opportunity to kill inflation so now Australian households will take the hit.

It isn’t just mortgages that are biting. Under Albanese, Australians are being hammered on every front. Food is up 8 per cent, housing up 10 per cent, insurance up 17 per cent, electricity up 18 per cent and gas up 28 per cent.

From rents to retail, inflation is due to Labor’s reckless decision to bring in hundreds of thousands of migrants without a plan to house them. The services you need cost more today because of rises in electricity, rents and labour costs — all things Labor has driven up without a plan to pay for it.

But it will get worse.

Almost daily the organisations that drive Australia’s prosperity are under attack by this new government. A year on from conning small business groups, miners, farmers and builders to attend the Jobs and Skills Summit, Labor is at war with all of them. So it’s no surprise prices are surging.

From the cost of building your first home to your morning coffee, from the food at the supermarket and even your Uber, Labor are fixated on driving up prices exactly when we need them to do the opposite.

But the gap between expectations and delivery is not only clear in the cost of living crisis smashing Australians today.

It took President Biden and ASIO Director General Mike Burgess to remind Australians of the threats posed by the Chinese Communist Party when Anthony Albanese failed to do so.

The same Anthony Albanese who used to talk tough on Chinese ownership of the Port of Darwin instead opted for the status quo. He reassures that his rapprochement with China is just about business, but his officials told the diaspora community in Australia that his visit to Beijing is “purely political”. Silence on the issues that matter to Australians should never be the price of a ticket to Bejing.

As the Middle East teeters on the brink of regional conflict Labor’s Cabinet is riven by open division on foreign policy.

With a war in the Middle East, a war in Europe and collisions in the South China Sea, the alarm is also being sounded by national security experts about how Labor is running Defence.

The widely respected Alan Dupont said this week “an unwillingness to back its sober rhetoric with real money is undermining the (Labor) government’s national security credentials at home and abroad. It now threatens to hollow out a defence force struggling to do more with less.” Labor’s failure to back up its tough talking on defence has been noted by those in the know and criticism from defence experts will only increase.

This comes as new asylum seekers, who arrived by boat, are being put into Nauru with the first child going into detention since Labor was last in government.

Labor are proving an Australian political truism, they are economic and national security failures.

Deep down they know it themselves, so it is no wonder the Prime Minister’s office is doctoring his transcripts.

If you are bewildered about how we got here, remember what the Prime Minister’s sole focus of his first 500 days was: the Voice.

Anthony Albanese took the Voice referendum from 61/39 majority support to the bottom of a cliff, 61/39 against. In doing so he killed constitutional recognition of indigenous Australians for at least a generation.

The Voice has now been consigned to the referendum-that-must-not-be-named status by Labor in the hope Australians will have a bout of collective amnesia. That hope evidently extends to the indigenous Australians who had their hopes raised, then crushed by Albanese’s arrogance.

Australia under Albanese is poorer, weaker, less safe and more divided.

And worst of all — Anthony Albanese is just getting started.

Metro train completes first journey from Tallawong to Sydenham

A metro train has successfully navigated the first continuous journey from Tallawong in Sydney’s northwest, beneath the Sydney CBD, and out to Sydenham in the city’s southwest, ahead of Sydney Metro City & Southwest opening next year.

The 51.5km trip was completed after 6 months of planning, with the train performing well and the inaugural journey confirmed a success.

The initial test run took place over 4 hours on Saturday, with the train reaching the maximum speed of 100km/h in sections of tunnel between Epping and Sydenham. Future test trips will include stops at stations in the Northwest and City sections, ahead of a full test run replicating operational journey times later this year.

When metro services start through the city next year, commuters will be able to travel from Tallawong to Sydenham in 59 minutes, a significant time saving on the current journey that requires interchange at two train stations and takes upwards of one hour and forty-five minutes.

In 2024, Sydney’s northwest and CBD will be connected by a metro service every 4 minutes in the peak. Passengers will be able to travel from Castle Hill to Martin Place in 35 minutes, Macquarie University to Sydenham in 33 minutes and North Ryde to Central in 22 minutes.

Testing the full length of the new alignment is a major step forward in the rigorous testing and commissioning program that began in April 2023.

The first end-to-end journey launches the “integration mode testing” phase, which confirms trains can seamlessly transition beyond the Metro North West Line at Chatswood onto the new 15.5km twin metro tunnels to Sydenham.

More than 2,000 hours of a total 11,000 hours of testing have been completed so far to ensure the new line and trains function as expected and meet all safety and performance requirements.  

Multiple trains are now entering the new line and undergoing testing at any one time, with four trains expected to be testing in the same tunnel by the end of the year.

Jo Haylen, NSW Transport Minister said:

“This is a huge milestone for Sydney Metro City & Southwest and brings passengers one step closer to having world-class metro services in the heart of this great city.”

“This new metro will give passengers significant time back in their day, by slashing travel times between the north west and the Sydney CBD.”

“This work is paving the way for Metro’s eventual extension to Bankstown, linking south west Sydney to the CBD and employment zones like Macquarie Park with a frequent and efficient Metro service.”

Major changes to small business procurement

The NSW Government has delivered on its commitment to boost government procurement of goods and services from small and medium businesses with a major change to government procurement.

A direction has been signed today, increasing the level at which government departments and agencies can purchase goods and services directly from small and medium businesses from $150,000 to $250,000.

The state’s 840,000 small businesses make up 98% of all NSW businesses, employing 1.6 million people in NSW – it’s these businesses and jobs that will be turbocharged by this change.

Each year, the NSW Government spends over $9 billion on goods and services obtained directly from 46,000 small and medium businesses in NSW and this change to procurement will deliver more government contracts going to these businesses and a bigger slice of government procurement spend.

This Ministerial Direction was issued to the NSW Procurement Board and requires agencies to implement this policy change no later than 31 December 2023.

It also serves as an important signal to government agencies to directly engage small businesses when procuring goods and services, including for:

  • catering, food and beverage services at state-owned museums, galleries, venues and sites
  • office supplies and furniture for government offices and buildings
  • maintenance and repairs, including ground maintenance and landscaping at government facilities
  • the development of training resources, including for health and wellness support.

The Government has also eased procurement requirements for small businesses which will no longer be required to submit proof of insurance when they tender. Instead, proof of insurance will only be required when a contract is awarded.

This is in addition to the NSW Government making a number of other significant changes to support small businesses in NSW, including:

  • Launched the Service NSW Business Bureaulaunch, which will give small business owners a seat at the table with a commitment to tackling unproductive red tape, helping businesses navigate government and boosting growth opportunities.
  • Delivered major upgrades to the Service NSW Business Bureau App.
  • Successfully delivered Small Business Month with over 600 events across the state.
  • Delivered energy bill relief for more than 300,000 businesses and toll relief for more than 700,000 Western Sydney families and businesses.
  • Launched the Service NSW Business Grants and Funding Finder, bringing more than 500 grants across 46 agencies into one place, to make accessing financial support easier for businesses across the state.

These changes do not apply to construction businesses.

The NSW Government has extensive fraud and compliance checks in place to maintain the integrity of government procurement.

For more information visit buy.nswlaunch

Premier of NSW Chris Minns said:

“Small businesses are the backbone of the NSW economy and it’s only right that the NSW Government use small businesses to deliver goods and services that the state requires.

“The NSW Government purchases around $40 billion worth of goods and services each year. The bigger we can make the slice that goes to small businesses, the better.

Small and medium businesses have been through a very tough time over the past few years, the very least the government should do is make accessing government contracts simpler and easier.”

Minister for Domestic Manufacturing and Government Procurement Courtney Houssos said:

“Small businesses already play an important role as they grow the state’s economy and sustain local jobs. By growing their opportunities to engage with the Government we can give them an even bigger boost.

“The previous Liberal-National Government never developed a cohesive policy to support local procurement. Instead of buying local, they sent major projects overseas, costing the state billions of dollars and thousands of jobs.

“This is the first step of the Minns Labor Government’s planned reforms to support small businesses, local content and domestic manufacturing.

Minister for Small Business Steve Kamper said:

“Small business plays a vital role in the NSW economy through the products and services they offer but also the many thousands of jobs they support.

“By increasing the direct procurement threshold we are providing small businesses with the most valuable resource in business, greater opportunity.

“As a government, we are committed to getting the policy settings right to ensure that NSW can best harness the expertise and agility of local small businesses, while supporting jobs and investing in NSW.”

New $2.5 million fund to investigate impact of screen-related addiction in young people

The Minns Labor Government is delivering on its commitment to tackle screen-related addiction in young people with a new research fund established to investigate the impact of problematic screen use on children’s development and learning. 

Delivering an election commitment to establish a screen-related addiction research fund, the NSW Government has pledged $2.5 million to support new research into the impacts of problematic screen use.

The NSW Government’s Centre for Education Statistics and Evaluation (CESE) will oversee the fund, with the grants awarded through a competitive process.

Research findings will deliver a comprehensive database of knowledge on how screen use affects young people and students at school, which can be used to inform stronger government policy.

Funding of up to $500,000 will be available to successful applications for tender grants, and up to $200,000 will be offered to successful recipients of partnership grants.

Partnership grants will be offered where research into problematic screen-use is already underway, after applications are competitively assessed. Open tender grants will be offered to projects with novel screen-related research proposals.

Issues that may be looked at include:

  • What are the key sources of problematic screen time for young people in NSW?
  • What impact is screen use having on the learning, wellbeing and behaviour of children?
  • Strategies to counter the negative impacts of problematic screen use
  • Whether today’s students are impacted by screens in the same ways as other generations
  • And the impact on teaching as a result of changing digital technologies.

The grants will be advertised in two rounds with the first beginning in late 2023.

Applicants will be asked to deliver their research by 2026.

This announcement comes after the Minns Labor Government successfully banned mobile phones for students in all NSW public schools from the beginning of Term 4, after consultation with teachers, students and parents.

Quotes attributable to New South Wales Premier Chris Minns:

“We all know young people love their devices – be it mobile phones, gaming devices or their computers.

“Many parents are worried about screen time and how it might be affecting their children and how they learn, but the impacts of devices on children are largely unknown.

“Investing in this research fund will help create a growing body of knowledge on this issue to inform our government policies, but it will also help inform parents in NSW.”

Quotes attributable to Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car:

“Students spend a lot of their time on devices – so it is important that we find out how this new reality is impacting children and their development.

“Many parents I speak with are worried about the impact screen time is having on their children, and it is important we help to provide parents all the facts they need to make informed decisions.

“Investing in research is vital, so the Government can form evidence-based policies that we know will have a positive impact on our students, teachers and larger school cohort moving into the future.”

GREENS CALL FOR AN END TO DEFENCE EXPORTS TO ISRAEL

Greens Leader Adam Bandt, speaking ahead of the Melbourne Institute’s 2023 Social & Economic Outlook Conference, which he is addressing along with the Prime Minister, today calls on the Prime Minister, Defence Minister and the Labor government to stop Defence exports to Israel.

Mr Bandt warns that the Minister for Defence, Richard Marles, also had obligations under Australian law to consider whether Australian exports could be used in the committing of war crimes, abusing human rights or aggravating threats to peace and security, and Mr Bandt is seeking advice on the legality of existing exports given the growing international condemnation of the Israeli military’s collective punishment of Palestinians in Gaza.

Department of Defence evidence to Senate estimates following questions by Greens Senator David Shoebridge last week revealed the Australian government had approved 350 defence export permits to Israel in the last five years, including 50 this year.

The Minister and the Department have refused to reveal how the exports are being used by the Israeli military.

The Greens have condemned the attacks by Hamas on October 7, called for the release of the hostages and prisoners and called on the Australian government to push for a ceasefire and an end to the invasion of Gaza.

In issuing permits, the Defence Trade Controls Regulation 2013 requires the Minister to consider a range of risks, including the risk that goods may be used to commit or facilitate serious abuses of human rights, in criminal activity or used to aggravate threats to peace and security.

Greens Leader Adam Bandt said:

“War crimes are being committed in the invasion of Gaza, so Labor must stop military exports to Israel.

“The Minister for Defence has legal obligations to consider whether Australian exports will be used in war crimes or threaten a region’s stability, but regardless of the legal situation, it is immoral for military exports to Israel to continue while Palestine is being illegally occupied and invaded.

“If the Defence Minister won’t act, the Prime Minister must show leadership and halt military exports to Israel and push for a ceasefire and an end to the occupation.

“Deaths in Gaza are approaching ten thousand, most of them children and women. Labor cannot wash its hands of responsibility for what is happening.”

Senator David Shoebridge Greens spokesperson for Defence said:

“Australia’s weapons export system is one of the most secretive and unaccountable in the world, with the public being kept in the dark about what weapons are sold, how much they cost or who is using them.

“Once the weapons leave our shores Defence simply washes its hands and does no follow-up on how the weapons are being used.

“This is not limited to Israel, Australia is also sending weapons and other military equipment to regimes like Sudan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Indonesia and other countries currently engaged in brutal conflicts.”

GREENS WIN SIGNIFICANT CONCESSION ON BRISBANE FLIGHT NOISE, VOW TO KEEP FIGHTING

The Greens have pushed the Minister to agree to direct Airservices Australia to operate both runways at Brisbane Airport over the water at once when safe to do so, subject to approval from the Airspace Advisory Board.

The Minister’s direction will mean changing the way Brisbane Airport operates, so that the airport must utilise its ‘SODPROPs’ mode whenever it is safe to do so. SODPROPs stands for ‘Simultaneous Opposite Direction Parallel Runway Operations’ and means that wherever possible, one runway is used for departures over water and the other runway for arrivals over water, rather than over the homes of Brisbane residents.

The change is expected to see a significant increase in flights taking off and landing over the water. The New Parallel Runway was approved and sold to Brisbane residents with the commitment that SODPROPs would be the preferred operating mode at all hours, but this commitment was quietly dropped in 2018 for daytime operations without explanation or community consultation.

The concession follows a growing community campaign, supported by the Greens, which has included a thousand-strong protest outside Brisbane Airport Corporation Headquarters earlier this year, and the recent introduction of the Greens flight noise bill to parliament calling on a cap on flights, night-time curfew, and more flights over the water.

SODPROPs mode is not always possible, particularly where weather conditions make it unsafe. But the commitment secured under Greens pressure will mean the Government must report clearly to the community on the share of flights going over the water. On occasions where SODPROPS can’t be used, the Government must report on the reasons why, allowing the Brisbane community to hold the airport to account for these decisions.

Elizabeth Watson-Brown, MP for Ryan and Greens spokesperson for Infrastructure, Transport and Sustainable Cities said:

“The Greens have secured a significant concession from the Federal Government that could see hundreds fewer flights take off and land over Brisbane residents and instead fly over the water.

“Given SODPROPs was the original preferred operating mode from Brisbane Airport’s new runway, we see no reason why the AAB won’t sign off on this proposal that will deliver immediate relief for thousands of people across Brisbane.

“This concession is a result of not just Greens pressure, but campaigning from thousands of Brisbane residents who have stood up and fought against the greed of Brisbane Airport Corporation.

“The community and the Greens will keep up the pressure to make sure more flights depart over the water and ultimately to secure a flight cap and curfew that would deliver long-term relief for Brisbane residents.”

Max Chandler-Mather, MP for Griffith said:

“Once implemented this concession won by the Greens could see the biggest reduction in flight noise since the opening of the second runway.

“While we’re pleased to have secured a potentially major improvement in flight noise, the Greens won’t rest until we’ve won a curfew and cap on flights, because Brisbane deserves the same protections as Sydney.”

Stephen Bates, MP for Brisbane said:

“The cracks in the Government’s position against action on flight noise are starting to show. This is only because the Greens and the community have been working together to demand better.

“Sydney residents secured a cap and a curfew with support from local, state, and federal representatives. This is a significant concession from the Federal government, and it shows that our pressure is working.

“Impacted residents will hold every level of government accountable until our city is delivered the same protections.”